Ohio’s “Heartbeat Bill” All But Bans Abortion

Abortion rights advocates in the State Capitol in Austin, Texas. July 13, 2013(AP Photo/Tamir Kalifa File)

This week, news broke that Ohio legislators passed what is being called the “Heartbeat Bill.” The bill bans abortion after a heartbeat is detected, usually after the sixth week of pregnancy.

The argument that most women are unaware of their pregnancy until after the sixth week of conception, making the law undermine a woman’s choice, has been one of the greatest talking points by the law’s critics.

After years of never making it past the state legislators, the bill’s crusaders cited President-elect Trump’s incoming administration and the inevitable new Supreme Court abortion decision on abortion, for bringing the Heartbeat Bill to the state senate.

Should former Republican presidential candidate and current Governor of Ohio, John Kaisch, passes the legislation, Ohio would effectively have the strictest time restrictions on abortion. Among it’s other controversies, the bill does not make allowances for cases of rape and incest. It does, however, grant an abortion on the condition that the mother’s life is in immediate danger.

Planned Parenthood, the ACLU, and the Center for Reproductive Rights intend to fight against the Heartbeat Bill in court on the grounds that it places an undue burden on a woman’s right to an abortion.

Governor Kaisch has until December 16 to sign or veto the bill. If he signs or decides not veto, it will be law within the first weeks of 2017.

by: Abigail Barker

Abigail Barker is a writer and editor at Rantt Media, joining the team in
October 2016. She primarily covers women’s issues, education, and the 2018 elections. Before joining Rantt, Barker lived in New York City working as a freelance writer and social media director in the fashion industry. Barker is from upstate New York where she is currently the Field Director for Congressman Paul Tonko’s 2018 re-election campaign. Joan Rivers called her cute once and it only went to her head a little bit. If you have a story idea or a bone to pick, Abigail can be reached at abigail@rantt.com and on Twitter @abigailybarker

Rantt launched in October 2016 with one goal in mind—to deliver the news and analysis the right way. No clickbait, no both-sideism, and no sensationalism. Instead, we write context-rich articles that focus on the most important stories of our time. We strive for quality, not clicks.